THE 4 THE DAILY EXAMINER. nm Ro oOcTO! ; } METHODS } B g at fact | a } . . 7 e » be i | { ‘ 4, Sal al e } a ‘ f is as x] f | rea | j ‘ Have « ! re g lavie , r wi © -~§ ‘ received the tT a ‘ | ¢ a t a L4e g pra y i i a ' : \ s@ a 4 a ‘ ‘ “ ¢ t i { j vote,” and € } f e Deber i i : hisfrar : Duehaway ) Grrab ( 4 ’ e, a ial i ve it ot eliig t e P @ ae a¢ c M Pren | ; et r ! tie al “ 5 ly ne 4 a etian ° 4 af > LET US TRY BUTTER NOW.” { uM upo Ww lerful § ess ' Canada at e W Fa pa | pe Kr ng News , 4 aay _ nada tr my} the ¢ mpetit 8 cause f t iratulation Bi ‘ I a g bd i ulya ‘ making should 8 ¢ tha as ait ter-prod Dn ‘ Canad st bea fe Cs l pre ¢ ¢ {tained liee i tr i th a is inet i t ‘ y #ve abe i ul ft i! sop of the 8a née #ystem as a means of my ng our butter tp I 5 ns to be well worthy attent of farmers in Prince Edward Island. They can, without doubt, produce i I nest quality; why uot try to p 1 qua ? The establish- sup i r cheese and the 8 “ t British markets ought to rage them t nh rganized etfort to pe ex} a large quantity of good bu They can have the finest pas t age | summer and they can grow rops for winter feeding We have no doubt that the Minister of Agr ‘ ture an be inauce 1 to pre mote tne making of butteras he has promoted the making of chees With nine cheese \ Fa I e Edward Island ‘ 1 off eight award Why not try f « . | ’ i ? —_— _ o-e+e $$$ ter. Dr. Partridge has suggested the appointment of two Suffragan Bishops w! would attend to the quickening and deejr ening of the spiritual life of the diocese, under the supervision of the Lord Bishop He ives that no rignut of sau ession hie ed be nvolved ; and that in this way the hetter ove rsight of Prince Edward Island might be effected ne a ec cman meme NEWS NOTES. M Llerbert Spen er haa been in feeble Since he returned in the his usual amount gives short dictations health r some time ' Brighton he has not d has remained house and yne of work, although he daily to his tary. His friends that his condition, while far from danger- mus, ia not satisfactory, and that he needs assiduous care to restore his strength fully and to enable him t) work asenerzetically I They do doubt that n formerly will regain hie health secre say not with care he Mr retar Asquith, the Gladstonian home sec- the E glish people , had been te ling } | be that the coming winter wi devoted by Parliament te urgent Briliish legislation Lord Sa istrary ays the aim of the union- ista to get the voice of Great Britain on the | question of Irish home rule, and that they will not t petty domestic matters intefere with the presentatian ofthe great issue In this particular aspect of the situation Lord Salisbury has the best position Home Rule is too big a que stion to be w rap- ped up in a parish council’s bill —_ ——- @Oe Personal, Lord Viv British aw bassidor to Italy, is dead Mr. W. A. Brennan, of the Journal arrived ly from ian, Summerside me Boston evening Mr. and Mra. W were passengers rived here from Halifax this morning M- Mre. David Chappel S. Louson, of Montreal, and arrived to New York and Bosto: At the Hotel Davies this morning, there were registered: Mr. and Mrs. Louson, Montreal; J. R. Valentine, Wood- bridge. N. Y.; W. E. Ramsay, Perth Amiwoy. N. Y. Allan Parsons, Montreal; Ernest J. Todd, St. Jobn > Captain W. H. Barnard, of Summer sile, who was here looking after the Hattie Louise and her cargo, left for | home this morning The captain’s | many friends here are glad to see him | looking so hale and hearty. rhe appointment of Alfred Ogden, ex- M. P., to be superintendent of the fish hatchery at Bedford Basin, Halifax county, is confirmed. Mr. Ogden was formerly superintendent of the lobeter hatchery at Pictou, and visited Charlottetown a few months ago with a supply of lobster ova. Mr. Henry C. Shaw, has lately been ad- mitted to a partnership in the law firm of McPhillips & Williams, Vancouver, B. C. | This is one of the leading law firms on the Pacific Coast, and Mr. Shaw ia to be con- jratulated on the success he has met with in his profession since going West. USE SK0A’8 DISCOVERY, the great 8 ood aud Nerve Remedy, last | n the Fastnet, which ar- | en -oe DAILY EXAMINER . COUNTY COURT. The County C« pened yesterday in sixty-five new suits and 23 Anets e docket. At the opening t writt idgments were deliv- 6 iint f ow , ta Rol Angus Lawrence W. Watson ~A i ght to determine the r erta window shutters attached Wats Building, Queen Street, vas 6 va ia pla ntiff, which wer ibsequently ren oved by A fter eir removal plaintiff - led the : g that they sand passed as such to him ‘ ler the deed of i an vas then agreed be- ‘ties that they should be re- ut a 1 bet ight t . ; and that idgment should * i ie ia fa pia pay him rt shutters a *un hetw The 1% porta iega quest is aw of fixtures and the right ¢ ul by a ve n the sale of | I ert I is argued last é Mr. H. J. Palmer for plaintiff and Mr. D C McLeod for defendant, I t was eserved Yesterday I \ lelivered a lengthy judgmen wv e law of fixtures as between rendee was ftuliv review, ana was give! iwainat the right ot we shutters nder the facts in this case rhe shutters g bee turned, judgment was en- inst the defendant f & nomina Massey-Harris Company, Limited, P » Wood and Leonard J, Wood | ss an actior nh a promissory note to A. Harris, Son & ‘a having the following rds #tlan ped thereon, which plaintitts aimed was an endorsement to them of t “For coll A. Har- ; ed.” There was no ted or written, added yds to authenticate tion only. Lie€< were by whom they nd it he ] 1 endorsement is case, incorporated omplete without evid- affixed br some offic- was t when an by an , itis in that it haa be the company having power to do so ‘of his signature,either stamped written thereon, to attest to the endorse- en THE SENATE, (From Harper’s Weekly.) It has now been demonstrated that the Senate is the weakest and most dangerous feature in the Federal system The framers of the Constitution regarded it as meritorious Its conetitu- was supposed to be their safest and 4 most device Lest compromise. It was to be a conser- ative check upon the possible excesses f the popular branch of Congress, and a lefence of the new democracy against witocratic or monarchical tendencies on e part of the President. It hal not ex- i eighty vears before it proved that e part of “its enpposed mission was a failure It was nota check, but a menace, to the Exeeutive. Now, at the beginning f the second century, it abundantly wes that excesses are to be expected than from the House of from it rather he prese ntatives. While the country has been growing ia intelligence, the Sengte has been becoming radical, communistic, dangerous. Of the eighty-eight members who now eompose sixty-two represent States created bv the Federal Government. Two more than Ralf of the Senators come from the far West and the South—the in in alliance on monetary ques- ms; the sections in which the popul sts are powerful, and in some instances domin- ant But these States elect only 137 Rep atives, while the more populous, th her, and the more intelleigent States f mem bers The admission of ew States, with there shifting, restless, uncertain, and speculative people, has in the number of Senators who represent thinly setteled parts of the wintry, that have a temporary advantage to gain from measures of legislation that weigh heavily upon the settled and con- servative sections, disturb their trade, and both their accumulated wealth and their active capital. It is probable that some of the Senators I meth- creased threaten who have been revolutionizing the ods of procedure inthe Senste by pre- venting it from action, by making it an obstacle instead of an aid to intelligent do not represent their constit- It nevertheless remains true that whenever dangerous radicalism gains tem- porary power in this country—and prob- ubly its gain will always be temporary—it will be more numerously represented in the Senate than in the House; and so long as its present constitution is continued, so long as machine politics triumph, so long as the President’s power of appointment is ' ' legisiation, uents laimed by Senators as their right, so long as rich nen bus seats = of Legislatures and small politicians acquire positions by the art of manipulation, we shall often see a helpless Senate at war with the President, and hostile to the real welfare of the whole country; for no State or section, however considerable, can gain a true advantage at the expense of the States that have by long settlement, by position, and by other natural advantages gathered the larger part of the wealth of the land. WHY GOLD VALUES FLUCTUATE. (Ar hbishop Walsh, in Nov. Donahoe’s) Gold, as the result of a variety of causes, is steadily and seriously increasing in value. Ard not merely does monometal- ism provide no check upon this increase, but the increase itself is, in great part, the reenlt of the changes that have been made in s0 many countrie®, in the direction of monometalism, within the last twenty years, ’ The chief source of the notable rise that has taken place in the value of gold is the heavy additional demand which, from qarious causes, has fallen upon gold during these latter years. One of those disturbing causes, for instance, was the | closing of the French and other European mints, in 1873, against the unrestricted coinage of silver. Another was the =, on, about the same time, of a gold standard of currency in Germany, and in + several other countries, which, until then, had retained a silver standard. All this led to an enormous extra demand upon gold, and consequently to a very notable increase in the value of gold. The necessary result of this increase’ in value is that our present monetary stand- ard of value has become an altogether misleading standard. As gold began steadily to goup in value, every existing | obligation to pay a fixed amount of r | pounds, shillings and pence became more home last evening after a five weeks’ trip | and more burdensome than before. ‘This, then, told heavily xgainst all debtors, and gave an undue advantage to all creditors. No class in the community, indeed, has suffered more disastroualy from the change than the owners of land charged with mortgages | Then the case of the national debts nil various local and other debts of the var | ious natiuns of the world furnish another instance of the evil resulting to the gen- eral community from a rise in the value of gold. a - A story is going the rounds that there will be an effort made at the next Liberal convention in South Oxford to supplant Sir Richard Cartwright as the Reform candidate and this is given as a reason for his approaching tour through his con- stituency. Mr,S. H. Jones, a wealthy Toronto real estate speculator and an old resident of South Oxford, is spoken as Sir Richard’s probable rival. Huwpreps of Jadies in ill health have been or are being restored to health and strength by the use of Hawker’s Tonic. It has become the great and popular i family remedy. aoenee ae | | | | | ONE WAY OF TAKING SEIDLITZ POWDERS. She First Took the Blue and Thenthe White and Died fromthe Effects of the Chemical Action in the Stomach, Christine Kroys, a chambermaid in the household of Mra. Georgie Smith. of 814 Lafayette as dace tad suddenly under such peculiar circumstances that Coroner Creamer has decided to make an official investigation into the cause of death to verify or disprove the theory advanced by Dr. Watterman, of 812 Lafayette avenue, that she was killed by a seidlitz powder. Miss Kroys had more intelligence than the average domestic. She came fron Germany three years ago, had lived with Mrs. Smith for two years, and passed he» twentieth birthday last month. Sue wa n excellent health, and the on'y com plaint that she ever had was an occasions! eadache. Sie was not in the habit iking drugs, and it is believed her deat! vas due to her ignorance of the vedieines. Mrs. Smith «ome shopping, and left Miss tne ¢ hildren The la ned cf light pain in her head, but when Mrs. Smith went away she was playing with the ‘hildred and seemed to be cheerful. The woman of the house was gone for several hours, and when returned she was surprised not to find the table set ready for supper. called the servant's name, and on receiv ing no answer became alarmed. At last she found the girl in the kitchen closet suffering from frightful use ot to a Kroys with went out girl had con she She | spasms. The domestic could not speak Mrs. Smith at once called in Dr. Watter- | man, who lives next door. The doctor came at once, and at the firat glace saw thatthe girl was beyond the aid of medical science. Dr. Watter- man examined the girl critically and on her lips discovered a white-powder the nature which he could not tell at a glance. This led to the belief that perhaps she had taken her life with some drug, al- though the symptoms did not indicate the presence of any known poison. A search was made, and on the dining room table were found the blue and white papers | which are used by druggists for séidlitz powders. In a glasson the table was a little of the white powder similar to that found on the lips of the girl. A seidlitz powder, as is well known, when taken properly the ccntents of each paper is dissolved in separate glassas, and are poured together. The condition of the powder as found that the girl had swallowed ihe vontents of each of the papers separa- tely in water without thoroughly dissolving the powder, and the chemical action had taken place in the stomach in- stead of inthe glass. The great commo- tion caused after the powders got together, Dr. Watterman believes, frightened the girl, and she ran to the closet inthe kitehen without knowing what she was doing, The rapid creation of carbonic acid gas distend- ed the stomach and the gas was discharged violently through the cesophagus into the throat. This would naturally cause a spasmodic action of the glottis, and in the struggle to breathe the gas was in- haled and filled the lungs, which gave her the sensation of choking and suffocation. To get relief she unconsciously began to cough violently, and as her strength gave out and her lungs were closed by the gas, she coughed harder until an artery in the brain burst and she became unconscious. The quantity of the gas increased in her lungs until she died from suffocation and intereraaial hemorrhage. There are cases on record in which seidlitz powders have been taken in this way and have caused death from suffocation, but they are very rare. A CORRECTION. Sir,-In the last Weexry Examiner there appeared a comrounication from a certain person or persons who undertook, at the expense of al} regard for the truth, to vilify a cow I had recently purchased. Such a contemptible lot of lies is seldom sent to the press for publication. It is a great pity there is allowed to live in nearly every community a certain class of people who have nothing todo but abuse their neighbors or their belongings, forgetting that sacred application, “ Do unto others as you would they should do unto you.” J. D. Bex. Montague, Oct. 23, 1893, + + 0+ Fof Over Fifty Years, Ax O_p Axp Wet Tried Remeoy.— Mrs. Winsloe’s Soothing Svrup has beed used for over fifty years by millions of mothers for their children while t#eth- ing, with perfect snecess. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays the pain, cures the colic, and is the best remedy for Diarrheea. Ie pleasrnt to the taste. Sold by Druggists in every part of the world. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Its value is incalculable. Be sure and ask fur Mrs. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup, and take no other kind.—m. w. f. wkly—-l y MARRIED. At St. Margaret’s Church, on the 10th inat., by the Rev. Father McLellan, P. P., Angus McDonald, of Black Point, to Bella, eldest daughter of Michael Morrison, Esq., Hermanville. ———— "DIED. At Big Pond, Lot 45, on the 14th inat., Jude McAuley, wife of the late Athan- asius McCormack, in the 64th year of her age, leaving two sons and two daughters and a large circle of friends and relatives to mourn the loss of an affectionate mother anda kind and trae friend. On Monday afternoon her remains were con- veyed to St. Margaret’s cemetery, followed by upwards of 40 carriages. The large number of persons who paid their respects to the deceased was ample testimony of the respect in which she was held by those who knew her in life. May her soul rest in peace. At Afton Road, on the 2ist October, inst., after an illness of two years, Donald McDonald, aged sixty-four years. He leaves a family of five sons and one daughter to mourn the loss of a kind and affectionate father. At Egmont Bay, on the 28th ult., dade- line Gallant, aged 20 years and 4 months, daughter of Stanislays Gallant. At O'Leary Station, on the 5th inst., of membraneous croup, Clifford Bayfield, EE aged | year and 5 months, son of Flora Jane and Robert Ellis, Jr, —EEEEE - = LOCAL NOTICES. Advertisements under this heading charged for at the rate of ten cents per line. 50 barrels choice family apples at auc- tion to-morrow.—E. H. Norton & Co. Gentlemen’s waterproof coats, 25 per cent off about fifty to choose from at James Paton'& Co’s. oct25 Rain prool coats at James Paton & Co’s oct25 Buy your water proof coats at James Paton & Co’s. oct25 Waterproof coats, in all styles and at very low prices. We have just receivel a fine Jot of the sleeveless, which is very popular for city wear—John McLeod & 0. 0¢25 21 For your own sake, you ought to look at our stock of clothing before you buy. We have the heaviest and cheapest. Many of our customers say, having looked over most of the clothing in town, that ours take the lead —J B Macdonald & Co. oct?5 6in Fresh buckwheat received to-day at Beer & Goff’s. 023 2i Come along and bvy your dry goods, carpets, clothing and hats from Prowse Bros., the wonderful cheap men, as they earry the largest assortment on the Island and sel] the lowest. 2i wy li—oct23 Every man and boy who wants a reefer, an ulster or an overcoat wiil find it to their advantage te,see our stock before making a purchase——McKay Woolen Co. octl &w indicates | By Auction, te-morrow, Thursday, at half-past 10 o’clock :— 50 Barrels Choice Selected Apples for family use or retail. E. H. NORTON & CO., Auctioneers. oct25 Masonic Temple QPERA HOUSE. Grand Opening. The Free Masons of Charlottetown intend to jormally open the New Masonic Opera House on the Evenings of October 3lst and November 2nd, when the following Pro- gramme will be presented ;— Tuesday, October 3ist, EUGENE SCRIBE’S COMEDY, ‘A Russian Honeymoon, IN THREE ACTS. Thursday, Nov, 2nd, E3UER: A DRAMA IN FOUR ACTS, MR. VINNICOMBE, with a full Orchestra, will assist on both occasions. Every effort will be made to ensure a suc- cessiul opening. Fvll details, with cast of character, will be published iater. Tickets, 50, 35 and 25 cents. Plans of Hall at Rankin’s and Dodd’s Drug Stores. Tickets for Lower Hall for sale at Dodd’s Drug Store. Tickets for Balcony Drug Store Pians of the Hall will be at the places men- tioned above on and after Tuesday, 24th inst. D ,ors open at 7.50. F. H. BEER, Chairman Committee. oct2i—2i, 25, 27, 31, new 1, 2. Removed! J.B. MACDONALD & CO temoved their Stock of for sale at Rankin’s D. MCLEAN, Secretary. Have Boots & Shoes —-TO THEIR—— NEW BRICK BUILDING ACROSS THE STREES. Please look at Stock in the New Store—the LARGEST and CHEAP- EST in the City. to our J. B. Macdonald & Co. Charlottetown, Oct. 19, 1893—eod “you DON’T HAVE TO DIE TO WIN,” A FEW GOOD FEATURES OF THE Covenant Mutual Benefit Association OF GALESBURG, ILLINOIS. Life Insurance at Actual .Cost. You get one-half of your Policy in cash WHILE LIVING, in case of permanent total disability from any cause, You will receive cash dividends annually after three years, thus reducing the cost of your insurance. You can get back part of what yow have pela in after fiye years in extendedear paid-up nsurance, You ean surrender your Polley after ten ears and receive your entire. contribution to he Emergency Fcnd IN CASH, Or ih event of your prior death it-will be uddedste the face value of your Policy. You can surrender your Policy on arrival at life expectancy and receive your total contri- bution to the Emergency Fund, together with all profits and avseretions thereto, IN CASH, or you can keep your Policy in forceand let your Smergency Fund accumulations carry it for you. Has paid in death claims over SEVEN MIL- LION DOLLARS. It has 50,000 members and now working its seventeenth year. Has assets in excess Of ONE MILLION DOL- LARS, and its Emergency Fund and surplus over liabilities exceeds EIGHT HUNDRED AND FIFTY THOUSAND DOLLARS. It has $58,000 deposited with the Insurance Department of Canada. It has no due and unpuid death claims. It has direct State supervision, protection and guarantee. It has $112,000,000 of business in Torce. It has already paid ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY THOUSAND DOLLARS to the Widows and Orphans and Beneficiaries of its deceased members in Canada. It has already written, during the first eight months of 1898, TWENTY-EIGHT MILLIONS of new business. © It has no membership fees, no annual dues, or other side issues to increase the rates, You ean elect to pay annually, se-ni-annu- ally or bi-monthly. i olicies incontestable and nonefor*eitable ae after three years. No chance of loss to the imsurec Will insure persons not over 50 Fears of aye for $20,000 or iess. Will insure perscas no over 55 years of age for $10,000 or ss, Will insure persons not over #) years of age hor $5.000 or less. Further information supplied by any of our duly authorized agents, or upon application to THEO. 1. CHAPPELLE, Agent for P. E. Island & Eastern NovaScotia. Ch’town, Oct. 19, 1893-—-3i eod wy li Tobacco varies in fla- vor and other quali- fies accord: in to where it is MASTIFF PLUG CUT is. a scientific mixture of the choicest grades selected by manu fac- turers of thirty years experience. J. B. Pace Tobacco Ca, Richmond, Virginia; and Montreal, Canada, smnaartianninonen cree ama St eee SreciaL Despatcues T9 Toe Exam:inER The Ulster Parliament. Strong Resolutions Home Rule. Against Organized Opposition to the Measure. terday at Ulster Hall. | Betrast, Oct. 25. The Ulster Parliament assembled yes- It consisted of 600 members elected by Unionists to take mea- sures to resist Home Rule. The sitting was private. The Duke of Abercorn was elected President. A simultaneous ference of Unionist women was held. The convention passed resolutions declaring the determination of the Ulster men to ad- here to their British citizenship, under the sole government of the Imperial parlia- ment, and repudiating as degrading, the position assigned to Ulster by the Home Rule bill. The resolution appealed to Irishmen in defence of their country against those wishing to separate it from Great Britain. The Convention elected a permanent League Council of forty, ten of whom are Irishmen. con- ——— ~<a = AN ISLAND BIGAMIST IN THE STATES. A Sensational Report that is Probably Lacking in the Essential Element. Matpey, Mass., Oct. 25. In the District Court, Edward B. Warren, of Cambridge, formerly of South Medford, Mass., was tried on a charge of selling a mortgaged property. The Gov- ernn:ent has in its possession a copy of the :narriage license issued by the city clerk of Cambridge to Warren and Sadie C. Martin, Cambridge, dated July 13, 1893. Warren has, according to the let- ters,a wife in Prince Edward Island named Jennie W. Warren. She has four children, and she claims that Warren had a wife and three children before he mar- ried her. He was never divorced. She was summonel asa witness, but did not put in an appearance. It was found nec- cesary to draw a new complaint and have the ease continued, After the trial of the mortgage case, Warren will be given an opportunity to explain away his wives. Oo An Editor Lionized. Sr. Jouy, Oct. 25. Yesterday, the students of New Bruns- wick University marched to Freder:cton jail and cheered Mr. Ellis, giving college cries and serenading with popular re- frains. Mr. Ellis told them he was deeply touched by this evidence of their good will and good feeling toward him. Last evening the members of his own lodge of Freemasons paid Mr. Ellis a fraternal visit at the jail. Prize Fighting at a Discount. Loxpox, Oct. 25. The committee of the Nationa] Sporting Club has declined the proposal to make up a purse for a fight between Mitchell and Corbett. It has also declined to allow the fight between the two men to be held in the club house. Representation of Winnipeg, Orrawa, Oct. 25. It is definitely understood that the resig- nation of Hugh John Macdonald, M. P., has been forwarded to the Speaker of the House of Commons, and it is expected that the warrant for a new election will be issued shortly. The Bicycle Record. Minneapo.is, Oct. 25. John S. Johnson, cyclist, lowered H. C. Tyler’s world’s record for the third mile, standing start (42 seconds), by going the distance in 39 3-5 seconds. TELEGRAPHIC NEWS. JOHANNESBURG, Oct. 23.—Later details from the front lessen the importance of the successes of the British South African Company’s forces in their engagements with the Matabeles. It is now known that the first engagement, which was credited with being a great victory for the whites, was simply a skirmish with a small body of Matabeles, who were guarding cattle. In the next fight, four hundred of the company’s native levies, led by whites, at- tacked a force of Matabeles, who not only maintained their position, but ultimately compelled the levies to retreat. The Mat- abeles pursued them for a considerable distance. Instead of a hundred Matabeles being killed, as the first report had it, their loss in killed and wounded was un- der thirty. Orrawa, Oct. 23.—T. G. Hoech, Royal Prussian inspector ef waterways, is here to-day. Mr. Hoech is one of a pariy of ten engineers sent out by the German Gov- ernment to report on engineering works in America. They have all visited the World’s Fair, and have now scattered in different directions, two or three coming to Canada. From Ottawa Mr. Hoech pro- ceeds to Montreal, and later with his col- leagues will visit the Maritime Provinces. €micaGo, Ill., Oct. 23.—The fame of Dr. Chas. Parkhurst has spread even thus far and ten prominent delegates to the conven- tion of the Women’s Christian Temperance Union who admired his methods deter- mined ts put them inte practice. Accom- panied by four police officers they last night visited a number of dives and saw with their own eyes just what temptations their male relat-ves and friends had to fitht against. (ne of the ladies, who. is only eighteen years old, was accompanied by her fiance. When the news of the ex- pedition leaked ont to-day it raised quite a commotion in religious W.C, T, U. cir- cles, Some Valuable New Books. “THE IMPREGNABLE ROCK OF HOLY SCRIPTURE,” by Rt. Hon W. E. Gladstone, 3 “ THE MAKING OF A MAN,” by Rev. J. W. Lee, D. D. ; “THE DIVINE ORDER OF HUMAN SOCIETY,” by Rev. Robert Ellis Thompson, S. T. D. “A MODEL SUPERINTENDENT,” by H, Clay Trumbull. “HINTS ON CHILD TRAINING,” by H. Clay Trumbull,” and a number of New Works especially valuable to Sabbath School Teachers, just received at CARTER’S BOOKSTORE, oct25 187 Queen Square, WEDNESDAY, CREAT OCTOBER 25, 1893. DISCOUNT SALE STILL GOING ON AT JAMES PATON & COS. i 4 (=) 20, 25 and 33s Per Gent Discount. — a ee —— eee MANTLES--Discounted. FURS--Discounted. All New Goods fe\ oo in Our Fur Department. LADIES’ - FUR ~ JACKETS, Cheapest and Best. JAMES PATO MARKET Charlottetown, October 20, 1893—eod Delays Are Dangerous ! Then to be Safe, always Insure with 6. We. Brow CHARLOT TETOWN N & GO SQUARE. Mail Cozntract. Tenders addressed to the Postmaster-Gener- al will be received at Ottawa urnti! noon on FRIDAY, !2th January next, for the convey- ance of Her Majesty's Mails on proposed con tract for four years from the lst of April next over the following route, viz :— CARDIGAN BRIDGE AND LAUNCHING— tri-weekly. Printed notiees containing full information as to conc!‘tions of proposed contract may ve seen, and blank i<-™s of tender may be ob tained, at the Post Office»: ‘‘ardigan Bridge, or at the office of the subseriber. F. pe Str. C. BRECKEN, / eet. P.O. Inepecter Post Office I nspector’s Office, ( Chariottetown, P. FE. Island, Bth October, 18s. : dy 3!